The Tiger Mother Made Me Do It

Amy Chua may be tough enough to keep a couple of little girls and an academic husband in line, but she can’t make me do anything I don’t want to do. Not only am I bigger than her, I’m pretty handy with a field hockey stick. Her shins look kind of delicate, is all I’m saying.

But I think we can all take something useful from the Tiger Mother, and to that end what I really want to tell you is this: I have recently become concerned about my dog’s modesty. When I take him out to the grass to whizz, inevitably someone drives by and starts staring at him. Apparently, people are helpless not to gape in fascination at a bulldog all hunched over and doing his business. Bulldogs are pretty stout to begin with, so when they hunch over and start grunting they become a solid ball of bulging eyes and dingleberries, and if you’re seeing it for the first time, it’s impossible not to wonder what the hell is going to happen next. Is it giving birth? Is this how we get bologna?
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Have yourself a guilty little Christmas

I spent a deliberate amount of time this holiday season thinking about how to be grateful. I was trying to get beyond, “We’re so lucky to have heat and jobs and three kinds of cheese and cable TV.” We are incredibly lucky to have all those things this year, but I was hoping to get below that, to dig underneath the stuff and find something less (and thus, I suppose, more) tangible.
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Lunch and other important topics

What did I just have for lunch? I’ll tell you: it was the end of a bag of Veggie Booty, a small container of quinoa salad from Cantwell’s, and 1/3 of a Debbie’s brownie accompanied by some Yogi Tea or other that Jackson chose last time we were at Whole Foods. It’s the sort of no-effort lunch that I excel at. My husband, on the other hand, came home at noon and cooked. Since lately we discovered something in his astrological chart that explains his drive toward culinary achievement, I don’t feel quite so lax in comparison. Well, yes, I do, actually, but I can blame my indolence on the lack of Virgo in my astrology!
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Survey Says!

The other night a friend and I were talking about how in the seventies we grew up with what seems like a far greater awareness of cultural events that took place before we were born than kids do now. Maybe it was because we only had six TV channels (and one TV) so we either had to watch what the adults were watching or go outside and blow something up, whereas now kids have far more control over what the media can embed in their skulls. It’s a trade-off: Jackson can gleefully ambush me in Call of Duty, but he has no idea who Andy Rooney is. And maybe that’s okay, maybe in the long run it’s more useful cultural currency for him to know more about gaming than a grumpy old man who laments the disappearance of typewriter ribbon, but it does concern me a little. I want him to find all kinds of things interesting, not just the stuff that’s targeted to his demographic. If you’re beginning to suspect this means I’m going to force him to watch Ethel Merman movies all through the holiday break YOU WOULD BE CORRECT.

Out of curiosity, I whipped up a quick survey for us all. See how you do!
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Just One Nipple!

This is a page from a magazine my mother received when she left the hospital with her first child in 1953. The drawing accompanies an article called “So You Can’t Afford a Nurse!” I don’t know anyone who brought an actual nurse home with her baby, did that used to be a thing you did? For normal, healthy babies? It sounds like a thing that Modern, Scientific People would have done when faced with the medical anomaly that is a helpless, pre-verbal human. And God forbid you’d put your own unsterilized nipple in its mouth.
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Life in the Slow Lane

About a year ago, one of my former-job coworkers happened to park next to me and noticed that the tread on my front right tire was so thin that the steel belt was coming through. This highly observant coworker spent her weekends wearing a helmet and driving a Lotus around a track in the desert, so I took her judgment about the state of my tread fairly seriously, and after work I drove (slowly) to the tire shop. The tire professional who looked at my tread actually gasped. Maybe he does that to everyone? It’s a sure way to sell some tires.
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I give up

Last weekend I was doing some fairly intensive yoga down in Ojai with some lovely people who don’t scare me at all anymore. About a dozen of us did our yoga practice in a canvas-walled yurt where the morning temperature hovered in the high 80s. We hiked to a swimming hole in 100-degree heat. I think every drop of water I drank over the weekend came straight out my pores. (I may have peed once over the course of three days, but no one can prove my kidneys had anything to do with it.) I ate kale and beets and chocolate mousse, and even though I’d been saving for months to be there with interesting people and do one of the things I love most, come Sunday morning all I wanted to do was lie on my mat and give up.

Give up what? Who knows. Health? Making any effort at all to care about my aging body? I just wanted to stop fighting and let life take over and carry me through whatever came next. Stiffness, decay, total inertia, death. Whatever. Who was I kidding? How was wedging my foot behind my neck going to help?

(You can see where my mind has been lately.)

Here are some more incontestable reasons I thought of, while lying on the floor of that yurt, for giving up ashtanga yoga.

  • I’m old and stiff and it hurts
  • I’m old and I’m goddamned tired
  • Laziness and quitting run in my family
  • Who am I to argue with tradition?
  • What’s yoga ever done for me?
  • These stupid stretch pants cost sixty dollars
  • Sixty dollars!
  • Why didn’t I start doing this when I was 20?
  • Of course I got my period this weekend
  • And I forgot my vitamins
  • I wonder if they still make Geritol?
  • What the hell was that sound?
  • How many times can a car backfire?
  • Wait — is there a firing range nearby?
  • It’s either someone’s doing target practice or a whole lot of people are getting murdered out there
  • Stray bullet, stray bullet, stray bullet, stray bullet
  • Please, God, make it quick and painless
  • zzzzzzzzz

When I got back to the real world, of course, I became completely depressed. I had post-retreat letdown, I think — the way coming back from even a short vacation can throw the hollowness of daily life into sharp relief. I had dreaded going on retreat, my life and routines having such a firm hold on me, but now there was so much more to dread coming back from it!

This is why people drink. I understand that now.

I thought of my mom, the way her hamstrings atrophied, lying there in bed after she broke her ankle and became afraid to walk. My mom gave up. Her heart was so tired and she spent the last years of her life lying in bed, waiting to check out. Is this how she felt? Jesus, why didn’t we get her some Prozac?

The thing was, even though my heart was heavy, after all that yoga my body felt remarkably not-painful and un-stiff. So I had a glimmer of a thought that maybe, despite the utter futility of existence, it wouldn’t be such a bad idea to unabandon a regular yoga practice. So I got up and went to practice Tuesday morning and I got up again today, and when that feeling washed over me, that feeling that I wanted just to fucking GIVE UP, I gave in to it. I gave up! It was the easiest thing in the world to do. What a relief! I give up! Here, take it! Take this shitty feeling, universe, I don’t want it anymore.

Oh, I kept practicing. I kept bending and stretching and breathing into my injured right hip and sweating through my $60 yoga pants, but I kept going and I gave up at the same time. I took a deep breath and I gave up feeling oppressed. I exhaled and gave up hating hard work. I became a fucking Nike ad and I Just Did It. I stood on my head and stopped worrying about being tired the rest of the day, or thinking about anything other than staying upright and counting my breaths. Death can come this afternoon or it can come when I’m 100 years old (or maybe I’ll get cryogenically preserved and wake up in the year 2410 to find my thawed-out head sewn onto the body of a chihuahua — but even that chihuahua body’s going to wear out, and let’s face it, my head is going to look like hell). And, yes, that’s a drag. But what am I going to do, bitch about it for the next fifty-four years? Or am I going to live my life?

Mid-life crises are a tawdry cliche, and being in your forties means different things to different people. But it seems like a common thread that pierces everyone’s heart eventually is when you finally start to grasp the inevitability of your own demise. I’m coming at it a little sideways, frankly; I’m not prepared to face it head on, and maybe no one with a young child at home is. Writing a will that sends your possibly-orphaned child to go live with relatives is one of the more devastating acts of parenthood. It feels absolutely crucial to stick around for the sake of this small, somewhat-helpless, desperately-loved person. (What was it Roseanne Barr said when she had her last child? “Oh, great, another reason to live.”)

I’m just trying to do my best.

Breakfast for the Giddy and Easily Distracted

I’m going to give Matthew credit for my breakfast choice today because as I was eating a giant slice of chocolate cake at 9:45 this morning I recalled him writing once about eating a chocolate chip muffin for breakfast, and how being a grownup was just like what he thought it would be when he was six.

I guess I needed to have the sense that I’d fulfilled a lifelong dream today.

Things I wonder about

1. Again this morning, Jackson walked out of the bathroom with his hair slicked back with gel, smelling of Issey Miyake cologne.

2. Jack’s friend just had all his teeth replaced for $20,000. Each new false tooth is on a titanium rod that screws directly into Friend’s jaw. For as long as I’ve known Friend, who is sixty-something, he’s been walking around with no teeth, and I hadn’t really noticed, he just looked like a dirty old man. Friend used to play guitar in a famous rock band and along with the new set of choppers Friend’s charisma has apparently returned. Or, as Jack puts it, “Oh, now I get it. He’s a handsome motherfucker.” His new girlfriend paid for the teeth.

3. I used to think you could safely go out into the world if at least three of four things — hair, face (with or without makeup), clothes, shoes — were working for you that day. If your mascara-boots-and-kilt combo rocked, it didn’t matter if your dirty hair was tied up in a rubber band. But lately I’ve been looking around and I’m noticing people with not just bed-head, devil-may-care hair but really bad hasn’t-been-cut-in-two-years hair and they just look like shit no matter what they have on, and they look especially ridiculous if they’re wearing makeup. As a matter of fact, a formal faceful of Mary Kay combined with any outfit that you’re not going to wear on television is a real problem. (Says the shoeless, makeupless woman whose hair, which hasn’t been cut in two years, is currently tied up with a rubber band.)

4. I used to work with Another Friend at a local bookstore, and I ran into her at the playground the other day, she was with her mom and her almost-two-year-old son who looks just like Miranda’s cute boyfriend Steve on Sex and the City. Another Friend weighs I’d say well over 200 pounds, but she is more okay with herself than anyone I know. Not just okay with herself, either, but smart and loves life and seems completely unselfconscious. You should have seen her come right on down the slide. I remember another coworker running the registers with her for a couple of hours and then saying to me in disbelief, “I can’t listen to another minute of how great Another Friend’s life is.” So when I’m old and withered and mean from too much yoga, Another Friend will be old and withered and just fine with herself, and I hope she’ll ask me over for tea. I’ll bring the animal crackers.

5. Weleda Diaper-Care butt cream smells exactly like Juicy Fruit gum.

6. I must really be in need of amusement, for I have just renamed my cell phone’s ring tones Vibrator, Frozen Tundra, Whimper, and Bang!

7. Can you spot the irony?

Scenario #1

Me (as we’re getting out of the car, which has been parked in the sun): Would you leave all the windows rolled down a little bit so it won’t be like an oven when we come back?

Jack: Oh, so someone with a coat hanger can come break in?

Scenario #2

Me (as we’re walking in to the grocery store): Would you press the remote thing that locks the car?

Jack (look of weary disgust): Where do you think we are, Compton?

Bonus question: How many miles do you have to drive, and at what speed, to fully cook a pot roast on your engine?